Tuesday, May 08, 2012

10 Ways to Help Migrating Birds



Dance of the Whooping Crane

Twice a year, birds big and small make the journey between their winter and summer homes, often a distance of thousands of miles. Here are ten easy ways to help them make it home and back again.

1) Reduce or eliminate pesticide and herbicide use. Using fewer chemicals in your yard and home helps keep wildlife, pets and people healthy.


2) Plant native plants. Natives provide birds with food in the form of fruit and seeds, and are also home to tasty invertebrates like bugs and spiders.


3) Keep cats inside. Keeping cats indoors ensures that birds outdoors stay safe and cats benefit too; indoor cats live much longer than cats that go outside.


4) Prevent window collisions. Make sure birds can see (and avoid) your windows by putting up screens, closing drapes and blinds when you leave the house, or stick multiple decals on the glass (decals need to be spaced closely together to be effective - no more than two to four inches apart).

5) Provide cover in your backyard. Leave snags for nesting places and stack downed tree limbs to create a brush pile, which is a great source of cover for birds during bad weather.

6) Help birds stay on course. Close your blinds at night and turn off lights you aren’t using. Some birds use constellations to guide them on their annual migrations, and bright lights can disrupt them.

7) Create or protect water sources in your yard. Birds need water to drink and bathe in, just like we do. Be sure to change the water two to three times per week when mosquitoes are breeding.

8) Landscape for birds. Use lots of layers, including understory, ground cover, shrubs, and trees. Multiple levels of plants let birds use different layers for different purposes, such as nesting, feeding, and singing.

9) Extend a bird safety net beyond your backyard. Contact your local Audubon Chapter to learn about opportunities to create healthy habitat in parks, beaches and other places in your community.


10) Take the Audubon At Home Healthy Yard Pledge! When you take the Pledge, you commit to conserving water, planting native species, removing invasive plants, reducing pesticide use, protecting water quality, and keeping birds safe in your yard.


Find more ideas at www.facebook.com/AudubonAtHome.

5 comments:

abhinavr said...

Important measures to help the birds !

Unknown said...

Now I know.. Thanks for the share..:-)SEO Montreal

Anonymous said...

Wow this is very good article looking nice & attractive.I LOVE TO READ YOUR ARTICLES.I love your way of thinking.Thanks for grate post.Google Indexing.

zogi said...

Great, but there are some more problems with migrating birds, for example that people in the other end of migration route just kill and eat those birtds :) autocad dwg

Kevin Marshall said...

I like this post because it is very very interesting.Thanks you very much for sharing this article.